Plant combination for producing steel and method for operating the plant combination

ABSTRACT

The invention relates to a plant complex for steel production comprising a blast furnace for producing pig iron, a converter steel mill for producing crude steel, a gas-conducting system for gases that occur in the production of pig iron and/or in the production of crude steel, and a power-generating plant for electricity generation. The power-generating plant is operated with a gas that comprises at least a partial amount of the blast-furnace top gas that occurs in the production of pig iron and/or a partial amount of the converter gas. According to the invention, a chemical or biotechnological plant is provided and connected to the gas-conducting system and arranged in parallel with the power-generating plant with respect to the gas supply. Externally obtained electricity and power-generating plant electricity are used to cover the electricity demand of the plant complex.

CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS

This application is the national phase of, and claims priority to, International Patent Application No. PCT/EP2014/003320, filed Dec. 11, 2014, which designated the U.S. and which claims priority to German Patent Application Number DE 10 2013 113 913.2, filed Dec. 12, 2013. These applications are each incorporated by reference herein in their entireties.

BACKGROUND 1. Field of the Invention

The invention relates to a plant complex for steel production and to a method for operating the plant complex.

2. Description of the Related Art

Pig iron is obtained in a blast furnace from iron ores, additives such as coke and other reducing agents such as coal, oil, gas, biomasses, recycled waste plastics or other substances containing carbon and/or hydrogen. CO, CO₂, hydrogen and water vapour inevitably occur as products of the reduction reactions. Apart from the aforementioned constituents, a blast-furnace top gas drawn off from the blast-furnace process often has a high content of nitrogen. The amount of gas and the composition of the blast-furnace top gas are dependent on the feedstock and the operating mode and are subject to fluctuations. Typically, however, blast-furnace top gas contains 35 to 60% by volume N₂, 20 to 30% by volume CO, 20 to 30% by volume CO₂ and 2 to 15% by volume H₂. Around 30 to 40% of the blast-furnace top gas produced in the production of the pig iron is generally used for heating up the hot air for the blast-furnace process in air heaters; the remaining amount of top gas may also be used externally in other areas of the works for heating purposes or for electricity generation.

In the converter steel mill, which is arranged downstream of the blast-furnace process, pig iron is converted into crude steel. By blowing oxygen onto liquid pig iron, troublesome impurities such as carbon, silicon, sulphur and phosphorus are removed. Since the oxidation processes cause an intense development of heat, scrap is often added in amounts of up to 25% with respect to the pig iron as a coolant. Furthermore, lime is added for forming slag and an alloying agent. A converter gas that has a high content of CO and also contains nitrogen, hydrogen and CO₂ is drawn off from the steel converter. A typical converter gas composition has 50 to 70% by volume CO, 10 to 20% by volume N₂, about 15% by volume CO₂ and about 2% by volume H₂. The converter gas is either burned off or, in the case of modern steel mills, captured and passed on to be used for providing energy.

The plant complex may optionally be operated in combination with a coking plant. In this case, the plant complex described at the beginning additionally comprises a coke-oven plant, in which coal is converted into coke by a coking process. In the coking of coal into coke, a coke-oven gas occurs, containing high hydrogen content and considerable amounts of CH₄. Typically, coke-oven gas contains 55 to 70% by volume H₂, 20 to 30% by volume CH₄, 5 to 10% by volume N₂ and 5 to 10% by volume CO. In addition, the coke-oven gas has fractions of CO₂, NH₃ and H₂S. In practice, the coke-oven gas is used in various areas of the works for heating purposes and in the power-generating process for electricity generation. In addition, it is known to use coke-oven gas together with blast-furnace top gas or with converter gas for producing syngases. According to a method known from WO 2010/136313 A1, coke-oven gas is separated into a hydrogen-rich gas stream and a residual gas stream containing CH₄ and CO, the residual gas stream being fed to the blast-furnace process and the hydrogen-rich gas stream being mixed with blast-furnace top gas and processed further into a syngas. It is known from EP 0 200 880 A2 to mix converter gas and coke-oven gas and use them as a syngas for methanol synthesis.

In an integrated metallurgical plant that is operated in combination with a coking plant, approximately 40 to 50% of the raw gases that occur as blast-furnace top gas, converter gas and coke-oven gas are used for chemical engineering processes. Approximately 50 to 60% of the gases produced are fed to the power-generating plant and used for electricity generation. The electricity produced in the power-generating plant covers the electricity demand for the production of pig iron and crude steel. Ideally, the energy balance is closed, so that, apart from iron ores and carbon in the form of coal and coke as sources of energy, no further energy input is necessary and, apart from crude steel and slag, no product leaves the plant complex.

SUMMARY

One object of the invention includes further improving the cost-effectiveness of the overall process and providing a plant complex with which it is possible to reduce the costs for steel production.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

FIG. 1 shows a simplified block diagram of a plant complex for producing steel comprising a blast furnace for producing pig iron and a converter steel mill for producing crude steel, a power-generating plant and a chemical or biotechnological plant.

FIG. 2 shows a simplified block diagram of a plant complex which comprises in addition to a blast furnace for producing pig iron and a converter steel mill for producing crude steel, a power-generating plant and a chemical or biotechnological plant also a coke-oven plant.

FIG. 3 shows the block diagram of a plant complex corresponding to FIG. 2 with an additional plant for producing hydrogen.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION

According to one embodiment of the invention, a plant complex for steel production comprises a blast furnace for producing pig iron, a converter steel mill for producing crude steel, a gas-conducting system for gases that occur in the production of pig iron and/or in the production of crude steel, and also a power-generating plant for electricity generation. The power-generating plant is designed as a gas-turbine power-generating plant or gas-turbine and steam-turbine power-generating plant that is operated with a gas that comprises at least a partial amount of the blast-furnace top gas that occurs in the production of pig iron in the blast furnace and/or a partial amount of the converter gas that occurs in the converter steel works.

Proceeding from a plant complex for producing steel comprising a blast furnace for producing pig iron, a converter steel mill for producing crude steel, a gas-conducting system for gases that occur in the production of pig iron and/or in the production of crude steel, and a power-generating plant for electricity generation, according to the invention a chemical or biotechnological plant is provided, connected to the gas-conducting system and arranged in parallel with the power-generating plant with respect to the gas supply. According to the invention, the gas-conducting system comprises an operationally controllable gas diverter for dividing the streams of gas that are fed to the power-generating plant and the chemical or biotechnological plant. Also the subject of the invention is a method for operating a plant complex that has a blast furnace for producing pig iron, a converter steel mill, a power-generating plant and a chemical plant or biotechnological plant. According to the method according to one embodiment of the invention, at least a partial amount of the blast-furnace top gas that occurs in the production of pig iron in the blast furnace and/or a partial amount of the converter gas that occurs in the production of crude steel is used as a useful gas for operating the power-generating plant and the chemical plant or biotechnological plant. Externally obtained electricity and power-generating plant electricity, which is produced by the power-generating plant of the plant complex, is used to cover the electricity demand of the plant complex. This involves establishing the proportion of electricity accounted for by the externally obtained electricity with respect to the overall electricity demand of the plant complex as a variable process parameter and establishing the amount of useful gas fed to the power-generating process in dependence on this process parameter. The part of the useful gas that is not used for electricity generation is used after a gas-conditioning operation as a syngas for producing chemical products or is fed after a gas-conditioning operation to a biotechnological plant and used for biochemical processes.

In the chemical plant, chemical products can be produced from syngases that respectively contain the components of the end product. Chemical products may be for example ammonia or methanol or else other hydrocarbon compounds.

For producing ammonia, a syngas that contains nitrogen and hydrogen in the correct ratio must be provided. The nitrogen can be obtained from blast-furnace top gas. Blast-furnace top gas or converter gas may be used as the hydrogen source, hydrogen being produced by conversion of the CO fraction by a water-gas-shift reaction (CO+H₂O≈CO₂+H₂). For producing hydrocarbon compounds, for example methanol, it is necessary to provide a syngas consisting substantially of CO and/or CO₂ and H₂ that contains the components carbon monoxide and/or carbon dioxide and hydrogen in the correct ratio. The ratio is often described by the module (H₂−CO₂)/(CO+CO₂). The hydrogen may be produced for example by conversion of the CO fraction in the blast-furnace top gas by a water-gas-shift reaction. Converter gas may be used for providing CO. Blast-furnace top gas and/or converter gas may serve as a source of CO₂.

Within the scope of the invention, a biotechnological plant may also be used instead of a chemical plant for producing products from syngas. The plant concerned is a plant for the fermentation of syngas. The syngas is used biochemically by way of a fermentation process, it being possible to produce products such as alcohols (ethanol, butanol), acetone or organic acids. These products, which are produced by fermentation of syngas, are also only mentioned by way of example in the present case.

According to a preferred embodiment of the invention, the plant complex additionally comprises a coke-oven plant. If the production of pig iron and the production of crude steel are operated in combination with a coking plant, a partial amount of the blast-furnace top gas that occurs in the production of pig iron and/or a partial amount of the converter gas that occurs in the converter steel mill may be mixed with a partial amount of the coke-oven gas that occurs in the coke-oven plant and the mixed gas may be used as a useful gas. A mixture of coke-oven gas and blast-furnace top gas or a mixed gas comprising coke-oven gas, converter gas and blast-furnace top gas may be used for producing a syngas, for example for ammonia synthesis. A mixed gas comprising coke-oven gas and converter gas or a mixed gas comprising coke-oven gas, converter gas and blast-furnace top gas is suitable for producing hydrocarbon compounds. The described chemical products that can be produced in a chemical plant from blast-furnace top gas, converter gas and coke-oven gas are only application examples for explaining the variants of the method that are described herein.

The raw gases—coke-oven gas, converter gas and blast-furnace top gas—may be conditioned individually or in combinations as a mixed gas and then fed to the chemical plant as syngases. The conditioning of coke-oven gas in particular comprises a cleaning of the gas to separate out troublesome contents, in particular tar, sulphur and sulphur compounds, aromatic hydrocarbons (BTX) and high-boiling hydrocarbons. A gas-conditioning operation is also necessary for producing the syngas. In the course of the gas conditioning, the proportion of the components CO, CO₂ and H₂ within the raw gas is changed. The gas conditioning comprises for example pressure swing adsorption for separating out and enriching H₂ and/or a water-gas-shift reaction for converting CO into hydrogen and/or a steam reformer for converting the CH₄ fraction into CO and hydrogen in the coke-oven gas.

In the case of the method according to the invention, at least a partial amount of the blast-furnace top gas that occurs in the production of pig iron in the blast furnace and/or a partial amount of the converter gas that occurs in the converter steel mill is used as raw gas, in order to produce products, that is to say substances of value, from them by chemical reactions in a chemical plant or by biochemical processes in a biotechnological plant. According to a preferred embodiment of the invention, the plant is operated in combination with a coking plant and coke-oven gas is integrated in the use. As a consequence of using part of these gases, the plant complex has a deficit of electricity, which has to be obtained externally. The externally obtained electricity may originate from conventional power-generating plants or be obtained from renewable energy sources. Preferably, the externally obtained electricity is obtained completely or at least partially from renewable energy and originates for example from wind turbine generator plants, solar plants, geothermal power-generating plants, hydroelectric power-generating plants, tidal power-generating plants and the like. To achieve operation of the plant complex that is as cost-effective as possible, at times of low electricity prices, electricity is bought in and used for supplying to the plant complex, and the part of the useful gas that is not used for electricity generation is used for producing chemical products after a gas-conditioning operation in a chemical plant and/or a biotechnological plant. At times of high electricity prices, on the other hand, the useful gas is completely or at least mostly fed to the power-generating plant in order to produce electricity for supplying to the plant complex. The chemical plant or biotechnological plant is correspondingly operated at a lower output at times of high electricity prices. A closed-loop control system is provided for operating the method, establishing the alternating operation of the power-generating plant on the one hand and the chemical plant or biotechnological plant on the other hand in dependence on a variable process parameter. The process parameter is preferably determined in dependence on a function that includes the price for the externally obtained electricity and the costs for producing the power-generating plant electricity as variables.

The method according to the invention makes it possible for the plant complex to be operated cost-effectively. The method according to the invention thereby also makes use in particular of the fact that the efficiency of a power-generating process for producing electricity is worse than the efficiency of a chemical plant or a biotechnological plant in which chemical products are produced by chemical reactions or by biochemical processes from syngas.

The product output of the power-generating plant can be controlled between 20% and 100%, in dependence on the amount of useful gas fed to the power-generating process. A gas-turbine power-generating plant or gas-turbine and steam-turbine power-generating plant is preferably used as the power-generating plant.

The product output of the chemical plant or of the biotechnological plant is controlled in dependence on the amount of mixed gas fed to these plants. A major challenge for the chemical plant is that of finding a way of operating dynamically with changing plant loads. The way of operating with changing plant loads can be realized in particular by the chemical plant having a plurality of small units arranged in parallel, which are individually switched on or off depending on the available stream of useful gas.

The use of a biotechnological plant has the advantage that a biotechnological plant is more flexible with respect to load changes than a chemical plant.

The plant complex for steel production that is represented in FIG. 1 comprises a blast furnace 1 for producing pig iron, a converter steel mill 2 for producing crude steel, a power-generating plant 3 for producing electricity and a chemical or biotechnological plant 11.

In the blast furnace 1, pig iron 6 is obtained substantially from iron ore 4 and reducing agents 5, in particular coke and coal. Reduction reactions cause the production of a blast-furnace top gas 7, which contains nitrogen, CO, CO₂ and H₂ as the main constituents. In the converter steel mill 2 that is arranged downstream of the blast-furnace process, pig iron 6 is converted into crude steel 8. By blowing oxygen onto the liquid pig iron, troublesome impurities, in particular carbon, silicon and phosphorus, are removed. For cooling, scrap may be added in amounts of up to 25% with respect to the amount of pig iron. Furthermore, lime is added for forming slag and an alloying agent. At the top of the converter, a converter gas 9 that has a very high proportion of CO is drawn off.

The power-generating plant 3 is designed as a gas-turbine power-generating plant or gas-turbine and steam-turbine power-generating plant and is operated with a gas that comprises at least a partial amount of the blast-furnace top gas 7 that occurs in the production of pig iron in the blast furnace 1 and a partial amount of the converter gas 9 that occurs in the converter steel works 2. A gas-conducting system is provided for carrying the gases.

According to the overall balance represented in FIG. 1, carbon is fed to the plant complex as a reducing agent 5 in the form of coal and coke and also iron ore 4. Occurring as products are crude steel 8 and raw gases 7, 9, which differ in amount, composition, calorific value and purity and are used again at various points in the plant complex. In an overall consideration, 40 to 50%, usually approximately 45%, of the raw gases 7, 9 are returned again into the metallurgical process for producing pig iron or producing crude steel. Between 50 and 60%, usually approximately 55%, of the raw gases 7, 9 can be used for operating the power-generating plant 3. The power-generating plant 3 operated with a mixed gas 10 comprising blast-furnace top gas 7 and converter gas 9 is designed in such a way that it can cover the electricity demand of the plant complex.

According to the representation in FIG. 1, a chemical or biotechnological plant 11 is provided, connected to the gas-conducting system and arranged in parallel with the power-generating plant 3 with respect to the gas supply. The gas-conducting system has an operationally controllable gas diverter 12 for dividing the streams of gas that are fed to the power-generating plant 3 and the chemical or biotechnological plant 11. Provided upstream of the gas diverter in the direction of flow is a mixing device 13, for producing the mixed gas 10 consisting of blast-furnace top gas 7 and converter gas 9.

In the case of the plant complex represented in FIG. 1, at least a partial amount of the blast-furnace top gas 7 that occurs in the production of pig iron in the blast furnace 1 and a partial amount of the converter gas 9 that occurs in the production of crude steel are used as a useful gas for operating the power-generating plant 3 and the chemical or biotechnological plant 11. Externally obtained electricity 14 and power-generating plant electricity 15, which is produced by the power-generating plant 3 of the plant complex, are used to cover the electricity demand of the plant complex. The proportion of electricity accounted for by the externally obtained electricity 14 with respect to the overall electricity demand of the plant complex is established as a variable process parameter and the amount of useful gas N1 fed to the power-generating plant 3 is determined in dependence on this process parameter. The part of the useful gas N2 that is not used for electricity generation is used after a gas-conditioning operation as a syngas for producing chemical products 16 or is fed after a gas-conditioning operation to the biotechnological plant and used for biochemical processes.

The externally obtained electricity 14 is preferably obtained completely or at least partially from renewable energy and originates for example from wind turbine generator plants, solar plants, hydroelectric power-generating plants and the like. The process parameter on the basis of which the amount of useful gas N1 that is fed to the power-generating process is established is determined in dependence on a function that includes the price for the externally obtained electricity and the costs for producing the power-generating plant electricity 15 as variables. To achieve operation of the plant complex that is as cost-effective as possible, at times of low electricity prices, electricity is brought in as external electricity 14 and used for supplying electricity to the plant complex, the part of the useful gas N2 that is not used for producing electricity being fed to the chemical or biotechnological plant 11 and used for producing chemical products 16 after a gas-conditioning operation. At times of high electricity prices, the raw gases 7, 9 that occur in the production of pig iron and the production of crude steel are fed to the power-generating plant 3 in order to produce electricity for supplying to the plant complex. The chemical plant 11 or the alternatively provided biotechnological plant is correspondingly operated at a lower output at times of high electricity prices.

The product output of the power-generating plant 3 is controlled between 20% and 100%, in dependence on the amount of useful gas N1 fed to the power-generating process. The product output of the chemical plant 11 or of the biotechnological plant is controlled in dependence on the amount of useful gas N2 fed to this plant. A major challenge for the chemical plant 11 is that of finding a way of operating dynamically with changing loads. This can be realized by the chemical plant 11 having a plurality of small units arranged in parallel, which are individually switched on or off depending on the available amount of useful gas N2.

In the exemplary embodiment of FIG. 2, the plant complex additionally comprises a coke-oven plant 17. In the coking of coal 18 into coke 19, coke-oven gas 20 occurs, containing a high proportion of hydrogen and CH₄. Parts of the coke-oven gas 20 may be used for the heating of the air heaters in the blast furnace 1. The gas-conducting system includes a gas distribution for the coke-oven gas 20. Provided upstream of the gas diverter 12 in the direction of flow is a mixing device 13, for producing a mixed gas 10 consisting of blast-furnace top gas 7, converter gas 9 and coke-oven gas 20. With the gas diverter 12, the streams of gas that are fed to the power-generating plant 3 and the chemical or biotechnological plant 11 can be controlled.

During the operation of the plant represented in FIG. 2, a partial amount of the blast-furnace top gas 7 that occurs in the production of pig iron and/or a partial amount of the converter gas 9 that occurs in the converter steel mill are mixed with a partial amount of the coke-oven gas 20 that occurs in the coke-oven plant 17. The mixed gas 10 is used as a useful gas for operating the power-generating plant 3 and the chemical plant 11 or biotechnological plant.

The blast-furnace top gas 7, the converter gas 9 and the coke-oven gas 20 may be combined with one another in any way desired. The combination of gas streams 7, 9, 20 depends on the desired syngas or the product that is to be produced in the chemical plant 11 or the biotechnological plant by using the syngas.

For example, it is possible within the scope of the invention that blast-furnace top gas 7 and converter gas 9 are mixed, that a syngas is produced from the mixed gas after a gas-conditioning operation and that conditioned coke-oven gas 20 is additionally admixed with the syngas or the cleaned mixed gas before the further processing to form the syngas.

Furthermore, there is the possibility that a syngas is produced from blast-furnace top gas 7 after a gas-conditioning operation and that conditioned coke-oven gas 20 is additionally admixed with the syngas or the cleaned blast-furnace top gas before the further processing to form the syngas.

Finally, there is the possibility that a syngas is produced from converter gas 9 after a gas-conditioning operation and that conditioned coke-oven gas 20 is additionally admixed with the syngas or the cleaned converter gas before the further processing to form the syngas.

In the case of the operating mode represented in FIGS. 1 and 2, the carbon content and the nitrogen content of the raw gases that occur during the operation of the plant complex cannot be used completely for producing chemical products, since there is a hydrogen deficit. In order to use the carbon content and the nitrogen content of the useful gas completely for the production of chemical substances of value, the plant complex represented in FIG. 3 additionally has a plant 21 for producing hydrogen, which is connected to the gas-conducting system by a hydrogen-carrying line 22. The plant 21 for producing hydrogen may be in particular an electrolysis plant for the electrolysis of water. Electrolysis of water is energy-intensive to operate and is therefore primarily put into operation at times of low electricity prices, at which the chemical plant 11 or biotechnological plant is also operated and the power-generating plant 3 is operated at a lower output. The hydrogen that is additionally produced is fed to the chemical plant 11 together with the mixed gas. This allows the capacity of the chemical plant 11 to be increased significantly. The same applies correspondingly if a biotechnological plant is provided instead of the chemical plant 11. 

The invention claimed is:
 1. A plant complex for the production of steel, comprising: a blast furnace for producing pig iron; a converter steel mill for producing crude steel; a gas-conducting system for gases that occur in the production of pig iron and/or the production of crude steel; a power-generating plant for electricity generation; a hydrogen-producing plant; and a chemical plant having a plurality of small units arranged in parallel that are individually switched on or off; and a closed loop control system; wherein: the power-generating plant is designed as a gas-turbine power-generating plant or gas-turbine and steam-turbine power-generating plant; the power-generating plant is operated with a gas that comprises at least a partial amount of blast-furnace top gas that occurs in the production of pig iron in the blast furnace and/or a partial amount of the converter gas that occurs in the converter steel mill; the chemical or biotechnological plant is connected to the gas-conducting system and arranged in parallel with the power-generating plant with respect to the gas supply; the hydrogen-producing plant is an electrolysis plant for the electrolysis of water and is connected to the gas-conducting system by a hydrogen-carrying line; the gas-conducting system comprises an operationally adjustable gas diverter for dividing and controlling the streams of gas that are fed to the power-generating plant and the chemical or biotechnological plant; the gas-conducting system further comprises, upstream of the gas diverter in the direction flow, a mixing device for producing a mixed gas comprising blast-furnace top gas and converter gas; the gas diverter adjusts an amount of the mixed gas fed to the power generating plant and the chemical plant when a price for externally obtained electricity reaches a predetermined threshold; the chemical plant comprises a plurality of small units arranged in parallel which can be individually switched on or off; and the closed loop control system establishes an alternating operation of the power generating plant and the chemical plant.
 2. The plant complex according to claim 1, wherein the plant complex additionally comprises a coke-oven plant, and wherein the gas-conducting system includes a gas distribution for coke-oven gas that occurs in a coking process in the coke-oven plant.
 3. A plant complex for the production of steel, comprising: a blast furnace for producing pig iron; a converter steel mill for producing crude steel; a gas-conducting system for gases that occur in the production of pig iron and/or the production of crude steel; a power-generating plant for electricity generation; a biotechnological plant for a fermentation of a syngas; and a closed loop control system; wherein: the power-generating plant is designed as a gas-turbine power-generating plant or gas-turbine and steam-turbine power-generating plant; the power-generating plant is operated with a gas that comprises at least a partial amount of blast-furnace top gas that occurs in the production of pig iron in the blast furnace and/or a partial amount of the converter gas that occurs in the converter steel mill; the biotechnological plant is connected to the gas-conducting system and arranged in parallel with the power-generating plant with respect to the gas supply; the gas-conducting system comprises an operationally controllable gas diverter for dividing the streams of gas that are fed to the power-generating plant and the biotechnological plant; the gas-conducting system further comprises, upstream of the gas diverter in the direction flow, a mixing device for producing a mixed gas comprising at least one of blast-furnace top gas, converter gas, and coke-oven gas; and the closed loop control system establishes an alternating operation of the power generating plant and the biotechnological plant. 